Lessons Learned From The Movie Captain Ron

by Jay Jennings on July 18, 2010

Tonight I watched the movie Captain Ron again (for about the 10th time in the last 12 months) — and let my daughter Chelsea watch it for the first time. I decided the story made up for the language and the slightly inappropriate shower scene. Partly because Chelsea’s now 14, and partly because the shower scene is just darn good comedy.

The story of Captain Ron is so freaking awesome: the Harvey family of Chicago inherits an old sailboat and decides to throw caution to the wind and sail it from somewhere in the Caribbean to Miami where they will sell it. Since they’re not sailors, they hire “Captain Ron” to sail the boat and teach them how along the way.

The movie stars Martin Short as Mr. Harvey and Kurt Russell (in a Speedo) as Captain Ron. It’s a funny movie with a great moral: Get out of your rut and go DO something as a family!

When my family started this whole “living on the road thing” I hoped to be in a trailer for about a year and then graduate to a sailboat. Due to business slowing down the sailboat piggy bank hasn’t filled up yet, but I’m still working toward that.

I’m starting to feel more than a little pressure because my son Tom turned 16 last February and while I don’t know that he’ll take off as soon as he turns 18, I want to get us on a boat for a while before he is eligible to escape my clutches.

Why? Because I think people who have “typical” upbringings are at a disadvantage in life. They see things in a very narrow way which limits their choices. After all, how can you make a sharp left when everybody else is veering right if you don’t even know that left is an option?

When we started this journey we didn’t have enough money saved up. But if we had waited until things were “better” we’d never have hit the road and experienced new things…

Places

We played on the beach in Santa Cruz.

Picked oranges outside our trailer in Bakersfield.

Walked the rim of the Grand Canyon (and got some great photos).

Watched the moon rise over the Superstition Mountains (and talked about the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine hidden there).

Wandered the streets of Tombstone where the Gunfight at the OK Corral took place.

Cheered Tom as he followed in his Uncle Nick’s footsteps and chased down an armadillo (it was catch and release, folks).

Saw the Alamo where so many American heroes lost their lives.

Visited the UFO Museum in Roswell. (“UFOs aren’t real, Dad.” Five minutes later, “Are UFOs real, Dad?”)

Drove across the London Bridge (brought brick by brick from London to Arizona).

People

And we met some wonderful people on the trip, including the Sauers family in Santa Nella. We ended up parked next to each other in an RV park and while there was a pretty big age gap between their kids and ours, they were still all kids and got along pretty well. After we left we continued following their travels via their blog.

And we met — and juggled with — both members of the Raspyni Brothers. Barry invited us to his house for the day to meet his family and play and Dan let us stop by his place for some juggling and an impromptu piano concert. I’d been fans of the Raspyni Bros for-freakin’-ever, so the chance to actually spend some time with them was the coolness.

Plus many more people — the families in Bastrop, the gunfighters near Tombstone, the jugglers in Austin, etc.

When you live in a house, and go to the same job every day, and see the same people all the time, you don’t have adventures. You just skate through life. And at age 47 I’m realizing life’s too short for that kind of skating — I regret the time I didn’t spend seeing new things and meeting new people.

Which is why if we had the opportunity to move onto a sailboat tomorrow, I’d do it — even though none of us know how to sail. We’d stay anchored (mostly) until we could figure out how to work the thing, but at least we’d be on the way.

I don’t see any reason to “settle down” at this point — there are too many things to see, places to visit and people to meet. How could you trade those things for a house fastened to the ground?

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Free Webinar: Create Video Promo Pages

by Jay Jennings on July 17, 2010

Discover how to use Instant Video Web Pages to create promo pages. Promo pages can be used to sell your own product or service, or you can promote a product as an affiliate. Using promo pages is a great way to monetize IVWP!  The webinar is 30 minutes and there will be a Q&A time.

Click here for Webinar Registration

The webinar is free, but limited to 100 participants – first come, first served.

If you aren’t a member of IVWP you’re still invited – whether you use the service or not video promo pages can be used to make more money online.

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The Death of Link ‘n Gruven

by Jay Jennings on June 26, 2010

In less than a month the LinkNGruven.com domain name will expire and I won’t be renewing it. And, seven of the most common spellings for LinkNGruven will also expire. (Most common spellings???)

LNG was a product that was born too early. It was a social networking application that was created before anybody knew that social networking was something to look at.

It was kind of a cross between Twitter, Digg, and StumbleUpon. Alas, it was not to be. And after 6 years of the domains renewing automatically, I *finally* remembered to turn off that flag. I have better things to do with that $80.

*sniff* Bye, LinkNGruven!

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Do What You Love

by Jay Jennings on June 11, 2010

I’m just about done reading a book called, The Instant Millionaire. One concept in it is that as far as a job goes, you really must do something you love.

I’ve heard that before, and I can understand it completely — if you love something, it ceases to be “work.” You’d do it even if you had all the money you needed.

While I enjoy everything that I do, I started thinking about what it is that I *love* to do. If I won a $250 million Powerball Lottery what would I do each day (after the obligatory whirlwind of celebrations and meetings with financial types)? If I could do anything, what would I do?

That is a freaking hard question.

While there are aspects of each that drive me up the wall, I love:

Performing – I haven’t done this as a professional in about 20 years, but I actually dropped out of school after the 8th grade so I could perform full time. In my early 20s I got burned out because it was such a struggle to make ends meet — I had no idea at the time that MARKETING was so important.

Writing – I’ve had dozens of nonfiction articles published (and no, I don’t mean online) but I’m still a virgin as far as fiction goes. I’d *love* to write stories for people all the time.

Programming – Mainly I think it’s the ability to start with NOTHING and end up with something that other people like and use.

Marketing – This is actually similar to programming in that you can create something (sales) out of nothing. Well, you need some raw materials (product, traffic, etc.) but I think in some ways they parallel each other.

I’ve done a few other things here and there, but those are the main categories that you could fit my career path into. There have been overlaps in all of them, and some going back and forth, but that list above is in mostly chronological order.

But there are a couple other things that don’t fit into a normal career that I love doing:

Being A Dad – If money were no object I can imagine being a Dad every day, all day. I love teaching my kids new things, exposing them to new experiences, and showing them sides of life that most people just don’t see. I was thinking this isn’t a “career” but a lot of parents (mostly Moms) do it and it’s more time-consuming (and I think more rewarding) than a normal job.

Acting – This kind of fits in with performing above, but to me it’s a completely different beast. I’ve done community theatre several times and think that acting professionally (TV, movies, or stage) would be a continual blast.

Switching Isn’t Easy

As someone who sold the house and almost all belongings and moved his family into a travel trailer to see the USA, I can testify that making big moves isn’t easy — but it can be done.

However, I think switching careers is harder because you usually have to “start at the bottom” when you start a new career so your income takes a dive for a while.

In my case, the biggest reason (at this point) why I can’t switch careers is…

…I have no idea what to switch it to. =:)

I’ve been happy doing those first 4 things up there. The 5th thing (being a Dad) isn’t something that’s easy to monetize, and the last one is something that, unless you are incredibly lucky, is not something that will pay the bills very soon.

So my options for “doing what I love” means doing something I’ve already done — or coming up with something completely new.

And I’m not sure there is anything new, because if I loved doing it, wouldn’t I already be doing it?

(The last time I wrote something like this I fielded a ton of questions asking why I was thinking of quitting internet marketing. That’s not what this is about — it’s about trying to figure out who I am vs who I should be. Maybe they already match, I’m not sure. =:) )

Are you doing what you love? Let me know about it in the comments below.

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New Partnership

by Jay Jennings on May 25, 2010

It’s not public knowledge yet, but I’m partnering with someone (who you’ve heard of) to bring Instant Video Web Pages into a more visible position online.

This is a true Joint Venture — we’re combining his proven marketing expertise and my development skills and IVWP is going to be so much better as a result.

The partnership announcement will come within a week or two, I think, but until then…

…guess who it is and if you’re correct I’ll give you a 50% off coupon code for any of my other products. No limit on winners — even if multiple people guess the right guy. There’s a clue — it’s a he. =:)

You can only guess once, but if you want to change your guess that’s cool — I’ll just look at your last guess.

And, just for guessing I’ll give you a 20% off coupon code — because I’m freakin’ nice, that’s why. =:)

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Why Use A Video Landing Page?

May 11, 2010

A landing page is a page on a web site where someone “lands” after clicking a link. In some cases it might be the main page (or home page) of the site, but in many cases a landing page is used as part of a marketing campaign and the desired action is for the person [...]

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Internet Marketing Trouble? You Might Need A Kick In The Butt!

April 28, 2010

I read a blog post recently from a well-known marketer and one of the comments was from someone who shall remain nameless. That person started a list of what new people need, and it included something that… automatically puts the correct keywords in a web page with the right density automatically submits all pages to [...]

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What I’ve Been Waiting For

April 22, 2010

It might sound kind of weird because I created the product, but Instant Video Web Pages is the tool I’ve been waiting for. As I was playing around with the Template Editor this afternoon I realized a lot of the other tools I’ve created were just practice for IVWP. Here’s why… While the primary purpose [...]

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New Look, Oh Baby!

April 10, 2010

I just spent the last 8-10 days working too many hours every day, but I added three VERY cool features to Instant Video Web Pages, plus… …I gave it a complete makeover. Before, it was functional and okay. Now it’s functional and COOL! Here’s a very quick video that will show you what it looks [...]

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The Pros and Cons of Video Marketing

March 29, 2010

Video marketing isn’t the practice of trying to market and sell videos, it’s using video to promote a product or service. Just like article marketing has you writing an article that’s designed to sell a product, video marketing works the same way. You record a video on a given topic and if people want more [...]

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